Obama Dems didn't count on nation of owners

Tuesday

Jun 29, 2010 at 12:01 AMJun 29, 2010 at 9:53 AM

Democrats are reportedly planning to raise $125 million for a campaign to sell Obamacare to the voting public. Apparently, what 50-plus presidential speeches and statements and months of congressional debate could not do can be done by $125 million spent on everything from TV ads to community organizers.

Democrats are reportedly planning to raise $125 million for a campaign to sell Obamacare to the voting public. Apparently, what 50-plus presidential speeches and statements and months of congressional debate could not do can be done by $125 million spent on everything from TV ads to community organizers.

There seems to be a more fundamental problem here. The Obama Democrats didn't set out to produce an unpopular stimulus package, an unpopular health-care bill and an unpopular cap-and-trade scheme. They thought these initiatives would be popular. In their view, history is a story of progress from small government to big government. The massive unpopularity of the Obama Democrats' programs suggests that view is defective.

The Founding Fathers believed there was a tension between representative government and the right to life, liberty and property. So they wrote the Fifth Amendment to ensure that no citizen was deprived of those rights without due process of law.

In Britain, that tension had been limited by allowing only property owners to vote. That way, those without property could not elect representatives who would steal from the rich and give to the poor. In the early years of our republic, that precaution did not seem necessary. We were a nation of farmers. Most citizens then considered relevant, white adult males, actually owned the land they farmed. There was no danger in allowing all of them to vote, because the large majority owned property.

The definition of relevant citizens in time expanded to include blacks and women. But as Americans and immigrants increasingly clustered in enormous cities, and as large industrial factories employed thousands of low-skill workers, the percentage of property owners fell.

A century ago, most urban Americans rented rather than owned their homes. Few had significant financial assets. Elites worried this proletariat might rise in revolution.

In this America, the Progressives argued that the Founders' vision was obsolete. Property rights should be subordinate to human rights. Government should regulate economic activity and "spread the wealth around," as Barack Obama told Joe the Plumber.

This view animated the New Deal in the 1930s and appealed to the non-property-owning majority. Franklin Roosevelt sowed the idea, harvested by the New Deal historians, that an expanding government was good and necessary. Democrats were referring to this when they said they were "making history" by passing the health-care bill.

The America of the Progressives and New Dealers no longer exists. Government home-finance programs helped make us a nation of homeowners. Technological progress and deregulation made the necessities of life less costly, enabling citizens to accumulate significant wealth in their working years.

True, we carried these things too far. Efforts to raise homeownership over 65 percent resulted in a housing-price crash. Poorly understood financial innovations resulted in the crisis of 2008. But we still live in an America like that of the Founders, in which citizens have every prospect of becoming property owners. And a nation of property owners is less willing to plunder the property of others in search of some promised gain than a nation where most people never will own significant property.

So when Susan Roesgen, then of CNN, upbraided a Tea Party protester in 2009 by reminding him that he was getting a $400 tax rebate thanks to the Democrats' stimulus package, she was met with utter dismissal. You don't sell out your property rights for a mere $400.

The polls and the post-2008 election results show that the purported beneficiaries of the Obama Democrats' programs are unenthusiastic about voting, and people with modest incomes are trending heavily Republican. The only enthusiasm for the Obama policies comes from David Brooks' "educated class": people who are or identify with the centralized experts tasked with making decisions for the rest of us.

Unfortunately for the Obama Democrats, they are not a majority in today's America.

Michael Barone is a senior political analyst for The Washington Examiner.

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